- The Burning Wheel
- Doors of the Temple
- Villiers de L'Isle-Adam
- Darkness
- Mole
- The Two Seasons
- Two Realities
- Quotidian Vision
- Vision
- The Mirror
- Variations on a Theme of Laforgue
- Philosophy
- Philoclea in the Forest
- Books and Thoughts
- Contrary to Nature and Aristotle
- Escape
- The Garden
- The Canal
- The Ideal found wanting
- Misplaced Love
- (First) Sonnet
- Sentimental Summer
- The Choice
- The Higher Sensualism
- (Second) Sonnet
- Formal Verses
- Perils of the Small Hours
- Complaint
- Return to an Old Home
- Fragment
- The Walk
Though Aldous Huxley is best known for his later novels and essays, he started his writing career as a poet. The Burning Wheel is his first work, a collection of thirty poems that pay homage in style to poets who wrote in the Romantic or the French symbolist styles. Many of the poems deal with themes of light, darkness, sight, music, art, war, and idealism vs. realism. Though the optimism in his early works waned as he became older, his characteristically optimistic and determined point of view shines through. - Summary by Mary Kay
The last poem was read collaboratively by ezwa, AlgyPug and Larry Wilson.
The last poem was read collaboratively by ezwa, AlgyPug and Larry Wilson.
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